Craps (After Hours)

Craps (After Hours) is the second album by American comedian Richard Pryor, released in 1971 on the Laff Records label. It was released during the comedian's transitional period from a middlebrow "Cosbyized" comic into a more improvisational, socially conscious, controversial brand of raw humor that Pryor would help to pioneer during the 1970s. Several monologues from the album were repeated for Pryor's debut concert film, Live & Smokin', although that film would be held from release until 1985 as a VHS videotape. Recorded at Redd Foxx's club in Hollywood, Pryor is introduced by the emcee as "the crown prince of comedy".[1]

Craps (After Hours)
Studio album by
Released1971
RecordedRedd Foxx Club, Hollywood, California
GenreComedy
Length36:21
LabelLaff
ProducerDavid Drozen
Richard Pryor chronology
Richard Pryor
(1968)
Craps (After Hours)
(1971)
That Nigger's Crazy
(1974)

For some unknown reason, possibly a mix up at the record producer, some LP's were pressed with a comic referred to as Hotshot Hogan on the B-side.

Side two of this album was later re-released in a split LP with Redd Foxx, "Pryor Goes Foxx Hunting" (Laff A170).[2]

Track listing

  1. "Gettin' High"
  2. "Fuck From Memory"
  3. "Big Tits"
  4. "Gettin' Some"
  5. "The President" (later reissues as "President Nixon")
  6. "Tryin' to Get Some"
  7. "Cool"
  8. "Cops/The Line-Up"
  9. "Masturbating"
  10. "Religion"
  11. "Black Preachers"
  12. "Being Born"
  13. "Blow Our Image"
  14. "Blackjack"
  15. "I Spy Cops"
  16. "Sugar Ray"
  17. "White Folks"
  18. "Indians"
  19. "Ass Wupin'"
  20. "Got a Dollar"
  21. "Pres' Black Baby"
  22. "Dope/Wino/Panthers"
  23. "After Hours"
  24. "280 Pound Ass"
  25. "Crap Game"
  26. "Insurance Man"
  27. "Black and Proud"
  28. "Gettin' the Nut"
  29. "Jackin' Off"
  30. "Snappin' Pussy"
  31. "Fartin'"[3]

References

  1. "Richard Pryor - "CRAPS" - After Hours". Discogs. Retrieved 2019-11-03.
  2. www.amazon.com https://www.amazon.com/Craps-After-Hours-Richard-Pryor/dp/B000001ECF. Retrieved 2019-11-03. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. "Craps (After Hours) by Richard Pryor". Genius. Retrieved 2019-11-03.
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